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Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Nov 1965, p. 3

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By THE CANADIAN PRESS A riot by 400 screaming, rock- throwing teen-agers in White Rock, B.C., two deaths in Que- 'bec, scores of injuries and some vandalism marred Halloween fun across Canada Saturday night. Halloween was generally cele- brated a day early this year, leaving Sunday to recuperate for All Saints' Day today in Que- bec. And police had their hands full. The White Rock, B.C., inci- dent was touched off when a group of youths in the U.S. bor- der resort community stole four wooden bicycle racks from a school and blocked off a road. The crowd swelled. Youths piled 2 Que. Deaths, Vandalism 'Mar Canada's Hallowe'en Fires also destroyed two empty houses near Brantford, a barn and a haystack and $150,- 000 worth of timber sheds at St. Thomas, a barn and a shed near Sudbury and damaged a former country schoolhouse) Also in Brantford, 31 tomb- stones were upset, and one man found 22 slashes in the fabric roof of his convertible. In London, Ont, a man wear- ing a Halloween mask held up a service station and escaped with $143. In Quebec, two costumed chil- dren were struck and killed by cars, while in Toronto; another three children were injured in separate accidents involv- ing cars. near Welland. | W. H. J. Thompson, QC (on right), new president of the Ontario County Unit, Canadian Cancer Society, W. H. J. THOMPSON HEADS CANCER SO discusses plans for the com- ing year with Ken Smyth, centre, outgoing president, and Dr. John M. M. Darte, SEE 10 PC VOTE DECREASE | (Continued from Page 1) The NDP has long advocated a national, government - spon-|, heme sored health care plan, but) o\vernment. In this he has had|But no names were mentioned leader T. C. Douglas has said|(\,ciderable Confederation for the benefit of|an independent. He all Canadians. But the dominant Diefenbaker) has been morality inj help from Eri] the Liberal program is unsatis- considerable help from Erik factory because it will not be universal. . The : Nielsen, member for the Yukon|Creditiste Leader Caouette pro-| . also favor a te ett in the- last Parliament whose/voked equal headlines with the herve revelations led to the Dorion|charge that the Liberals plan Mr. Diefenbaker has criticized|ivuiry into the Lucien Rivard] ig Liberal method of handling 'Social Credit wants health scandal Mr. Douglas has also made care on a voluntary basis and|some political capital in this objects to the Liberal proposal ret but has on the grounds government compulsion interferes with indi- vidual and provincial rights. Mr. Pearson set the tone for) Di his campaign in the Sept, 7 tele- changing vision-radio address announcing|Sumer the election. He called for a ma-|'" jority to replace his parliamen-| theme as the campaign wore on. Mi His party held 127 of the 265 prices. dissolution,|reduced, but Mr. the|they are still far above U.S. NDP 18, Creditistes 13, Social|rates. Commons seats at The Conservatives had 92, Credit 9. Two seats were held joined Mr. The NDP leader the' jefenbaker in accusing Liberal government of short-| the Canadian. con-) in the tariff-cutting auto ade agreement with the U.S.) They said the Liberals should| tary minority and developed the|have ensured the auto compa-|facts and figures which, he said, es reduced Canadian auto) Fall line prices were Douglas said Mr. Douglas also attacks by independents and four were what he calls a lack of Liberal vacant. election standing of: 129, Conservatives 95, Credit 24, NDP 17. On a visit to the Maritimes, 'c Social I : leadership. He s Ths compares with ----------eewrn Mo ee many top 1963 defectors. A Con- suggests that The underlying theme of the Western-based campaign of a turned the Liberals to office. ia Credit Lé@ader Rober which has complained of an eco-/ Thompson is the preservation of nomic lag behind other regions, y erty from govern- "s : the ee eet ' paign arena with a promise to Mr. Pearson emphasized need for a strong central gov- ernment to keep the economy DE rolling. On the Prairies, where Lib-! erals held only three of 48 seats, area. in the last Parliament, the ap-|of western|obtain the support of six Social in a majority |Credit members of Parliament peal was for "proper" NY WRONGDOING However, he too has stepped nto the morality-in-government He accused the Liberals "skullduggery'. in trying to representation Liberal government. He also/from-Quebec.after the last elec: carried the majority - govern- tion. The Liberals denied ment theme into Ontario wrongdoing In Quebec City, he drew ap- This affair was brought to the lwhich Mr. Diefenbaker says is fi ey CIETY UNIT speaker at the annual meet- ing here of the Ontario County unit last week. --Oshawa Times Photo head of the Department of Haemaltology at the Hospi- tal for Sick Children, To- ronto. Dr. Darte was guest fore in a pamphlet by Dr. Guy Marcoux, a Quebec Social Credit MP running this time as named Transport Minister Pickersgill and others and suggested $25,000 in bribe money was involved Douglas Plans 5 Big Rallies BURNABY, B.C in connection with it major rallies in five cities i In his Quebec campaign, 4. many days lie ahead for T.| Douglas as he winds up his cam- at alects int -. paign in a federal election he| post-election conscription in or hopes will produce a significantiance of power der to send troops to help the breakthrough for his party. In Regina tonight and in Win- accented other charge categorically. He saidjnipeg, Montreal, Toronto and) [Canada has no troop commit- Vancouver | New Democratic Party U.S. in the Viet Nam war. Mr. Pearson rejected the ments whatsoever in Viet Nam. between On the Prairies, particularly, Mr. Diefenbaker has laid the| ¥ blame for last January's wheat- price decline on the Liberal doorstep. However, in a Saskat- chewan visit, Mr. Pearson cited} showed farmers were doing well under the Liberals. PC DEFECTORS RETURN The prime minister occasion ally injects into his speeches a jibe about Conservative unity, return of restored with the jservative cabinet division pre- Two Services: \ceded the 1963 election that re- : Mr. Diefenbaker introduced old age pensions into the cam- increase them from $75 to $100 monthly at 70. The money would come from premiums collected lunder the national contributory ----|cemetery were knocked over| (CP)--Five| pranksters : Tuesday) 4) church. Only Mr. Douglas land Friday, the NDP leaderjand Liberal nominee Richard ill be talking about what hisH SIMCOE ST. UNITED CHURCH 124th Anniversary SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7 GUEST PREACHER: Rev. Earl S. Lautenschlager D. D PRINCIPAL OF EMMANUEL COLLEGE, TORO lumber, hurled gasoline - filled/ BOY BURNED bottles and set the barricades! A Berwick, N.S. boy was se- ablaze. verely pach ge when firecrack- y ers exploded in his pocket and Pi gghttenead pata bE in Jasper, Alta., one person re- policemen suffered minor inju- ceived burns requiring hospital Pes and a fire truck and one treatment after a skyrocket set ceed an' were badly dented| "te to a box of fireworks at a Pp : r jcommunity display. by rocks, Police in Eastview, Ont., RCMP said youths tried tojsought the person responsible prevent firemen from dousing|for giving away apples with the flames. The firemen turned | pins buried in them, and in Oril- rowdyism resulted in 24 youths facing court charges for speed- ing, iliegai possession of aico- placing a false fire alarm, NEW YORK (AP) -- There was the usual boisterious fun as Halloween was observed during the weekend, but the trick-or- treat season had soqme oQver- tones of tragedy in the United States. Near Washington Court House, Ohio, vandals burned down a 200-foot wooden covered bridge--one of the few such bridges left in the state. Philadelphia police sent loud- speaker cars cruising through north Philadelphia warning res- idents of potentially dangerous medicinal capsules which were hol, throwing firecrackers, lit- +4 H ' |the Maritimes are bein tering streets and one charge Of|qimped penniless in rt ecg "they were rejected on medical onda." THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, November 1, 1965 3 . MacEachen Denies Charges Workers Dumped In Sudbury. SUDBURY (CP)--Labor pet ot receiving their first pay ister MacEachen denied in a|Cheques. letter read here Sunday night| He also said that of 442 men that hundreds of workers from|brought here~only eight were not given employment. And ds. | The letter, read at an. all- candidates' meeting, was in re- ply to an earlier accusation by, Ald. Melville (Bud) Germa,| New Democratic Party candi-| date in Sudbury. He had claimed International Wicket eee eee D Co. of Canada Td. here did not) =SUPER-FA bead -- provisions for) = looking. after prospective em-) <= eat ployees who did not meet com- PELIEF l=" pany employment require- ments. | Bre seholts-Zino-peds, They Mr. MacEachen's letter said | ss remove one of prospective employees WOT Clonee ' to a they left the Mari.) F imes they should be prepared Ul ele to meet their living exporter! D Scholls Zino pads given trick-or-treating children. Authorities said they had re- covered all but about 30 cap- sules, They said six capsules could kill a younster, Source of the pills was traced to a re- tarded child who had mixed the medicine. with candies. In Chicago, a 10-year-old girl was abducted by motorists who put her trick-or-treat bag over their hoses on the youths to get lia, bottle caps, buttons and .22- to the fire. |calibre cartridge shells were q mixed in bags of popcorn TWO ARRESTED eS Ne. In Loggieville, N.B., blazing Five carloads of police, aided roadblocks caused accidents re- \by civil defence volunteers, fin-|SU Iting in minor injuries to car ally quelled the. rioting. One| drivers and in Woodstock, N.B., youth and a juvenile were ar- jrested. 5 Elsewhere in B.C., however, lit was a different Halloween. | Rain, a ban on firecrackers and| ja host of teen - aged parties | jsponsored by community | |\groups served to halt much of \the usual vandalism. | | Gravestones in a Vancouver} and several mailboxes were cut} to the ground. A London, Ont., fireman called) it the "worst Halloween" he) could' remember in his 38 years | jon the force. Firemen attempt- ling to put out fires set by were pelted with} nieggs. The fire department re-| ceived more than 200 calls, in-| icluding 50 to put out fires. party will do if it holds a bal-| in eumee jafter Nov. 8. Mr. Douglas participated Sun-| day night in what was billed as} all-candidate debate at a lo- ayes were there at the end. 11:00 A.M, and 0 P.M. NTO pension plan plause by outlining his party's| efforts in introducing the maple leaf flag, popular in Quebec. But on majority government, he also says it is necessary to help preserve national unity Meanwhile Mr. Diefenbaker was countering that the prime min- ister stands for two Canadas-- one French and one English--to the detriment of other national origins. He also accused Mr. Pearson of whittling away at the powers of the central government since he took office in 1963. If Que- bec, Mr. Diefenbaker promised HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS MEN'S WEAR Who's fussy enough to a great conference to reshape shape a suit collar TROUDI | Tues. and Wed. Specials: LEAN, TENDER FRESH, TASTY, SKINL RINDLESS SLICED Club Steaks JU' Minced Beel.5™ 1 WIENERS 3" BACON ESS 59: with pure Irish linen? Michaels-Stern Come see all the fine tailoring in.our Fall collection of Courier Cloth suits OURIER CLOTH is an exclusive Michaels-Stern fabric. It's a tich wool worsted--soft to touch, but hard to wear out. There are rich touches in the tai- loring of our Courier Cloth suits, too. Michaels-Stern adds a layer of Trish linen to keep the collars in shape. Strong 3-ply nylon thread keeps the buttons from popping. And 500 tiny padding stitches keep each lapel contoured--permanently. Stop in and see how well you can look in a Courier Cloth suit. tobe re 3 'MEN'S WEAR 9r Friday Oshawa's Foremost Fine Clothier Since 1924 her head, took her to an apart- ment, and raped her, Also in Chicago, five teen- |agers wearing Halloween masks land face paint beat a young ngagement rings. wife and took her wedding and CONSTRUCTION CLERK CITY OF OSHAWA SALARY RANGE -- $84.00 week -- $95.00 _ 36% hr. week bg sed Full High School required. Knowledge of blueprints en esset. Check Inspectors' daily reports and record payment items for each con- tract. Check calculations and finol measurement forms Inspectors. Check oggregate and asphalt tickets, keep record of totals. Control over- loading of vehicles, checking material tickets against licenced capacities of trucks, Prepare weekly report of progress on construction projects. Check invoices and distribute costs, Give full details of education, experience, age, marital status, ete., and submit application by 5:00 p.m, November Sth, 1965 | Personnel Officer, City Hall, Oshawa, Ontario. TOTAL TRUST ... WE MUSTN'T LET THEM DOWN A IN ONTARIO RIDING The NEW DEMOCRATIC PARTY BELIEVES EVERY Child Has A RIGHT TO Positive Future IN DURHAM RIDING Published b Complete Medical-Dental-and Optical Care Free Education At Every Level Economic Security For Results! Not Promises! Vote NEW DEMOCRAT! OLIVER YOUR CHILDREN WILL BE GLAD YOU DID! Ontario Riding New Democratic Party 18

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